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October 24, 2025 • 44 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia show,
sase stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice Doctor Dahlia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlia.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
You should thank you all for g men one eight
seven seven Doctor Dolly one eight seven seven d O
C D A L I so.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Yo.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
The headlines are saying that inflation rose three percent.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
This is horrible, Yet the stock market is booming today.
And what I.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Guess the reason is because the forecasters thought that the
inflation was going to be worse three point one percent,
So the fact that it was three percent seemed to
please a.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
Lot of investors, and so stock market is really really happy.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Also, seniors are happy because they are going to get
a bump in their Social Security benefits because of cola
costs a living increase, their benefits are going to rise
another two point eight percent in twenty twenty six, So
the average monthly check is going to be around two
thousand and sixty four dollars, up fifty six dollars from

(01:36):
this year. Seventy one million people get Social Security Now
if you do the math.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
That's not matching inflation.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Though, So if the cost of living is going up
and they go and they you know, raise it two
point eight percent and.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
Inflation might be on the rise, that's making some people nervous.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
But at least it's some positive news as it pertains
to seniors. I think seniors should be getting cost of
living increases. I don't think they should be taxed on
Social Security. I don't think. I think it's really ridiculous
to tax them on Social Security. They should be taxed
on income. But social security that's not that that they

(02:22):
earn that, especially if you've been working for years putting
that money in. So, you know, if prices rose three
percent and you're only getting two point eight percent and
you're falling short, what do you do? Well, two thousand

(02:43):
dollars a month? What two thousand and sixty four dollars
a month doesn't cut it? You know, And and people
ask you, why is social security so low? Well, nobody
could afford a ten thousand dollars a month social Security check.
But the average senior or can't live on two thousand

(03:03):
and sixty four dollars a month.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
That's not practical.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
The original thinking in the old you know, when social
Security started was many people would have already paid off
their house or be living with family. They wouldn't be
having high rent, they wouldn't still be having a mortgage,
and so most of that money would then go to

(03:29):
their food or medical expenses. Also in the sixties, medical
expenses were not as expensive.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
As they are now. Now that we could treat cancer,
we have.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
G lp ones to help people fight you know, weight
gain of their diabetes.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
We could prevent.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Heart disease and do all these procedures now and I mean,
what we're able to do is amazing, but it's expensive.

Speaker 3 (04:00):
So Medicare was supposed to cover all that. No, they
don't cover drug prices.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
They you know, there's the hole, the donut hole, and
there's the you know, and you now need to get
Medicare advantage and you need to well by the time
you do all that, you have nothing left from your
Social Security and the system is messed up.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
You were never.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Supposed to use your Social Security check for your medical issues,
with the exception of a couple of medications.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
But that's not like that.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
Now you're gonna have the extinctionists or the people who
feel that.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
The root of all our problems is over population.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
And they're gonna say, look, we're in this predicament because
we are not letting nature take its course when the
heart attack happens or the cancer happens, we are And
as a doctor, I don't want nature to take its course,
so I was trained to fight nature. My job as
a doctor is to make sure you live as long

(05:06):
as you possibly can, that you would, you know, as
you want to, and function well and be there for
the kids and the grandkids, beep as painfree.

Speaker 3 (05:15):
As you can. That is that's my job as a doctor.
But with that costs a lot of money.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
And so if we are now down to two thousand
and in fact, one of my family members only.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
Gets about twelve hundred.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
She apparently they didn't have they didn't put enough into
social security, not exactly sure why. She was a housewife
part of it. And and so she's twelve hundred a month.
That's not covering Jack Didley squad. And no, she doesn't
own her own home. She has to rent, and rent

(05:54):
to sixteen hundred dollars a month. This is not sustainable.
And if we can't take care of our seniors, and
I know there's people out there saying, well, they lived
a good life. No no, no, no, no, Okay, we
all put in our dues so that by the time
we're seniors, society that turns.

Speaker 3 (06:16):
Around and helps us. We pay it forward.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
My family helped the older people in society. Now it's
their time for them to get out.

Speaker 4 (06:26):
Now.

Speaker 3 (06:26):
My father died at the age of sixty.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Two, so that's one less body taxpayers have to take
care of.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
But that's not a good thing. That's a horrible thing.
And so the idea, well, most seniors own their own house.
I don't think they do. Now.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
For those of you that do own your home in California,
gods speed, that's wonderful.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
I mean, don't let that house go.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
If you have a family home, you just keep writing
that because that's that's money in the bank. But the
average person has moved, they've been widowed, widowed, and you know,
they're try the hardest. And then the idea, well, they'll
live with family. That's not the way things are right now.

(07:17):
The average person does not live with their children. It's
a different attitude. I mean, it's you know, in laws,
and attitude starts in laws and divorce rates. Yeah, so
we have got to collectively figure out a better system.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
Because social security was a good system.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
When things were cheaper and when you know the money
they were receiving could adequately support them.

Speaker 3 (07:46):
That's not the case right now.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
One eight seven seven Doctor Dolley.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
Hey guys, it's doctor Dahlia.

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Speaker 2 (10:17):
All we are back on the doctor Dolli issue, Thank
you all for tuning in. One eight seven seven Doctor
Dolly one eight seven seven d O C D A
l I. Big thanks to Talk Media Network for making
the show happen. Big thanks to Daniel, our producer, and
big thanks to you all for tuning in.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
We really do appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
Don't forget to follow us on Twitter or ex the
Doctor Dollia, Facebook, The Doctor Dahlia Show, and on YouTube,
click like and subscribe. So the one thing we are
starting to see is a quote unquote UTI epidemic where
it seems like everybody and their mother and now their
father are getting UTIs and they're calling up tell them
as the companies saying they're burning when they pee and

(10:55):
they have a UTI. They're getting treated with an antibotic
and might help, might not help.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Call back, didn't work. I need a different antibiotic.

Speaker 2 (11:07):
And as you know, as a doctor that kind of
likes old school, how I was trained is if somebody's
having burning when they pee, you get a urine sample.
You check if there's blood, see if there's proteins, see
if there's sugar. Tell a lot about the kidneys, because
the kidneys are supposed to filter what do kidneys do.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Kidneys filter the blood. The blood goes through the kidneys.
The kidney decides what to keep and what not to keep,
and what not to keep. It puts into the urine.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
What it keeps, it keeps. If the kidneys are functioning properly,
you can be healthy. If your kidney's you're not functioning properly,
you will start to lose things you need to keep,
or keep things you're not supposed to keep, and you
can become very, very sick, which is why some people
end up needing dialysis, where a machine then acts like

(11:59):
the kidney do and.

Speaker 3 (12:01):
Does the filtering.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
So how I used to do UTI's is you'd come in,
because that's how it used to be. You had to
come into the doctor. You give me a urine sample.
I would be able to on a dipstick get an
idea if you might be having an infection or not.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
But then I would send a year into the lamb.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
I would give you a treatment that day, because I
understand UTIs are pretty painful, and I would start you
on an antibiotic. But then if the culture came back
no bacteria, and a lot of times in twenty four hours,
it would say you know no bacteria, but it would
take three days for a fall on culture. I would
call you and say you're burning. It's from something else,

(12:46):
so come back in let's take a look at it.
You don't need to take the antibotic. Or if the
culture came back that there is an infection, it would
also give us a culture and sensitivity, meaning what do
you have, do you have ecoli, do you have clubsiella?

Speaker 3 (13:00):
What's the bacteria?

Speaker 2 (13:01):
And then what is it sensitive to? And if you
have a resistant bacteria and I gave you an antibiotic
that it's resistant to, I would switch. Now a lot
of doctors didn't want the hassle of a patient having
to pay for two different medications having to switch the antibotics,
so many of them would learn which antibiotics had less

(13:22):
resistance and would just go for those. Well, now we
started to cause more resistance because we were.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
Using the big guns when we didn't need to.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
And then I would tell a patient to follow back up,
drop off another urine sample. Don't pay me, just drop
off another urine sample, so we could see if you
were cured, and we really minimized the number of people
having return quote unquote UTIs, we also would determine if

(13:54):
you had kidney disease. If we saw chunks of protein
in the urine, we could also pick up diabetes if
your blood test was add borderline that I'm seeing sugar
in the urine. If there was blood in the urine,
we were able to pick up on infection cancer. We
did a lot, and if somebody was having actual true
UTIs multiple times a year, we would send you to

(14:15):
a urologist to figure out why what.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Was putting you at risk.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
If it turns out you were not having UTIs, they
were urines that did not have bacteria in it, but
you had a inflammatory condition that made you burn down there,
like interstitial sostiitis. There's a different treatment for that, and
so we would work hand in hand with urologists to
make sure these people weren't overtaken antibiotics that they didn't
need to and were able.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
To relieve some of their symptoms. That's changed.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
People don't go to the doctor anymore for the UTI.
In fact, we're having moms call in saying, my kid
as a UTI, give me an antibotic, and like we
kind of need to know what, especially if it's a boy. Now,
males getting UTIs a male getting a UTI is some
serious stuff. Men don't usually get UTIs. The anatomy is

(15:04):
a little different. It's a lot easier for a woman
to because the orifices are a little closer to each other.
But with a male, that bacteria has a long you know,
a long distance to climb inches. And so if a
man gets the UTI, you really can't get that treated online.

(15:24):
I know there's some companies that are trying to, but no, no, no,
you got to do a urine sample and that if
you are of a UTI, you need to see a
urologist to figure out why. What else is going on,
is there's something wrong with your prostate, something wrong with
your kidneys. And then of course some of these are
not UTIs that these women and men are having they're
STIs or sexually transmitted illnesses or STDs, and so Bernie

(15:46):
when you pee could be an STD, which is why
the antibiotic isn't working, because you need to be treated
for the SDI and not a UTI. And then I
had a friend of mine who actually had cervical cancer.
She kept being diagnosed with the UTI for discomfort, and
that discomfort was because she had stage three cervical cancer.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
And not a UTI. So I'm more old school.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
I really liked people getting examined, and I'm glad somebody
examined people because this was an interesting finding. They say
one in five urinary tract infections and a group of
patients in southern California were linked to eat coali from
contaminated meat at the grocery store. The researchers found eighteen

(16:32):
percent this is in southern California, of more than twenty
three hundred urinary tract infections or UTIs. This was published
an m biojournal on Thursday, were linked to eat coli
strains found in meat samples from grocery stores in the
same areas. So it's not that okay, Well, they had
eat coli in their system. They were able to verify
the strain and the meats that were found to test

(16:55):
positive for this E Coli were turkey, chicken.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Followed by pork.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
And now somebody could say, how are you giving yourself
a UTI if you're eating meat, Well, you have to
eventually poop that out, and when you poop that out,
then that bacteria has a chance to move up. Now,
sex sex is a big risk factor for UTIs also

(17:23):
risk factor for STIs also a risk factor for other
sorts of inflammatory conditions. By the way, if you're metapausal
and you have thinning in the area many people say,
I burn after sex. Well, if you aren't as plump, lubricated,
thicker down there, it's thinner, you are going to burn.
That doesn't necessarily mean you have an infection, but also

(17:43):
a thinning of the lining could also put you more
at risk for UTIs.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
Again, you want to verify what you have. But sex.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
Interestingly, we used to call UTIs the honeymooner disease. And
we call it the honeymooner disease because people would wait
till they were married. Well, I mean, in theory, they
would wait to have sex until they were married. Then
they would have a lot of sex on their honeymoon.
They would come back with burning and have a UTI
because sex can introduce bacteria from the different areas. And

(18:17):
you know, people ask what's the best way to prevent
UTIs from sex? Well, one, you know, cleaning first, two,
being very careful with using multiple orifices during sex, and
three emptying your bladder after sex. Some people go, how
does that help, Well, because you have the flow. It's mechanical.

(18:37):
We're not rocket scientists in medicine. But if you have
a Niagara falls of urine peing out, there's a.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
Hard, much more difficult chance for.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
Bacteria to try to climb up through your urethra and
get into the bladder. So it is important to empty
your bladder after sex. Most of us like to fall asleep.
But if you're get empty your bladder after sex hydrating,
the more you drink, the more you could urinate.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
That's also important.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
And then of course making sure you need a balanced
diet that are not I mean to compromise, because unfortunately,
if you aren't mean a compromise, you could be getting
more UTIs. But you know, we if we're not cooking
our food properly, you can give yourself a uti, they say. People,
according to CBS News, living in low income areas had

(19:23):
a sixty percent higher risk of food born UTIs compared
to those in wealthier neighborhoods. You know, is it because
of inadequate food safety regulations for retail conditions and proper
food handling hygiene practices.

Speaker 3 (19:37):
You shouldn't be getting food riddled with E. Coli. But
your food is not sterile like chicken.

Speaker 2 (19:42):
Chicken can easily have salmonilla, that's why you gotta cook
them really good. However, like with beef, many people like
their medium rare steaks.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
No no, no, no, you need to cook it.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Your your ground beef paddy needs to be gray, not pink.
So there does need to be more strict issus put
in place for meat producers and things like that to
make sure that you know individuals are not getting sick
from their food. Don't forget to wash your hands, cook well,
wash the sink area. But if you hydrate well and
urinate well, then it does minimize your chance. And of

(20:15):
course you know cleaning and hygiene practices, et cetera. But
we're we're seeing sadly a lot of UTIs that might
not be UTI's this spread of STDs, and they say,
we have an epidemic of STDs. They'll because many of
them get burning when they pee. They call up a
telamedus a company, get a prescription for UTI, and meanwhile

(20:36):
they still have the STD and they're spreading it. So
my recommendation is, I'm very grateful that tell Themedica companies exist,
but if you're having recurrent UTIs, please for the love
of God. Get urine sample done in Culture seven Doctla

(21:01):
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Speaker 2 (22:23):
All right, we are back on the Doctor Dolli Show.
Thank you all for tuning in one eight seven seven
Doctor Dolli one eight seven seven D O.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
C D A L I.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
So Disney, there's been some rumors that Disney is struggling
a little bit in terms of its newer movies and
in terms of having villains in the movies because they
have been accused of not being plically correct and some

(22:55):
of their choices with their villains sidelining, biasing kids against people.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
There was an article.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
Saying that I guess Disneyland is phasing out some of
their villains in the park. I gotta be honest. I
was just at Disneyland last weekend. You didn't see a
lot of characters. You did see the Avenger characters. Uh,
in the California Adventure, you got to see those a lot.
That was really really cool. You saw Black Panther, you
saw Spider Man. Even Spider Man did like a little

(23:26):
thing that was cool. You did see the Avengers. I
might have seen one Mickey Mouse, but you didn't see
all the characters. Now they do do parades and and
oh yeah they did they I guess they they stopped
doing fireworks in the middle of the week, so I
think they have like a parade, and the parade.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
Was pretty Now, I just you.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
If you don't get seating two hours in advance, the
Disney people say, keep goking, keep walking. You can't stand,
keep walking, and so you can't really stand and watch.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
That's good. I just went on more rights.

Speaker 2 (23:58):
So yeah, I didn't really see any villains and all that,
but it was interesting because I was on the Little
Mermaid ride under the Sie and there was somebody sitting
you can hear somebody talking in the booth behind me,
and Ursula was the villain and Little Mermaid and somebody

(24:20):
behind me or somebody maybe they were in front of me,
but a voice was saying, yeah, they're not gonna do
that anymore, make them fat. And I didn't even think that,
you know, Ursula was the villain, but she was obese
and purple and and you know, it's like, who were
they thinking of?

Speaker 3 (24:41):
You know, does somebody have a mother in law that
looked like that? You know what?

Speaker 2 (24:44):
What what what was their creative colonel to make you know,
uh uh that inspired them to make the villain look
like that.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
But if you remember a few years.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Back, people were upset about out of Laddin and Ja'far
and culturally appropriating you know the Arabians at the time,
Arabian Nights, you know that, and and you know and
and then you know you have Scar, which was not
overweight but underweight, and you know, people were saying that

(25:20):
that that was also uh not. You know, so you
kind of go back and forth, going is Disney getting
themselves to a point where they're going to really really
struggle because somebody is going to find fault with whatever
they're doing. I mean, this is why they're remaking. You

(25:42):
have Lee Lo and Stitch, and they're trying to do
these remakes because they're struggling to come up with new
stories or or that won't necessarily go.

Speaker 3 (25:51):
Back and and and.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
You know bring up you know, woke criticism, and so
why do we have villains?

Speaker 3 (26:00):
Why do we have Disney villains? Now?

Speaker 2 (26:03):
I was never a big Disney fan. I remember thinking
Fantasia was boring. I don't really remember watching Bambi. I mean,
I thought Bambi was cute, but I really don't remember
watching Bamby.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
I thought Dumbo was boring.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
I liked a Latin when I was older, I liked
The Lion King, and I liked disney Land Park, but
I really didn't do much with Disney and was nemo Disney.
So I like some of the newer Disney stuff. Snow
White I thought was boring. I really wasn't. Cinderella scared

(26:38):
me a little bit. Cinderella I didn't like that much
because she's this beautiful, blonde princess, and you know, I
couldn't relate to that. I wasn't gonna be beautiful and blonde. Yeah,
I was gonna look more like the Stepsisters. And so
I was like, why do I want to look at this?
They're making the Stepsisters like?

Speaker 3 (26:58):
And so I get how.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Some people like, uh, you know, Disney's kind of outdated
and all that. But these stories, the Disney stories, weren't
always as clean cut.

Speaker 7 (27:09):
You know.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
Many of these Disney stories were were from stories that
were very adult, you know, like you know, the you know,
there was you know, assault and there there there were
things in it that that had to be cleaned up
for kids. But the stories themselves weren't necessarily supposed to

(27:31):
be these pediatric stories. And you know, we the reason
why we have villains is because stories have protagonists and antagonists.
Most stories have to have an antagonist, somebody that the
protagonist has to fight or overcome. And so like in

(27:51):
the original Superman, the lex luthor Gene Hackman did a
really good lex luthor.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
And and you know, and and I've seen.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
The other lex luthors are not bad. You know, was Eisenberg,
the guy that was in the Social Network did a
lex luthor, and then the new guy. I mean, they
did pretty well. But the villain is actually a very
very important character.

Speaker 3 (28:13):
In fact, the.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
Villain is one of the most complex harder to cast.
You need a really really good villain, You need a
really really good antagonist. And if you don't nail that
in Hollywood, it doesn't matter how good looking and nice
the protagonist is. You don't get the depth of the
story without having that antagonist or that villain. The problem

(28:38):
is is that villain has to be believable. And what
Hollywood is doing is they're saying, well, look, what we
have to do is make sure we don't insult anybody.
So what we need to do is have a white
male against a white male, which which is in white
males can be jerks and villains too. But you're starting
to you know, you know, change the the your when

(28:59):
when you're starting to dive in to what's going on
and trying to you know, you know, immerse yourself into
the story.

Speaker 3 (29:09):
When the story out the gate, you know, has to.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
Throw that political checklist in, you know, saying look, okay,
we're gonna play it safe. We're just gonna make everybody
the same, and we're gonna you know, you're you're yeah,
and you're missing out on some really really good stars
and and some really good, you know, really good good
storyline and character development. I mean, I loved that they

(29:34):
used Will Smith as a genie. You know, they did
an Aladdin remake and it's a really tough act to follow,
you know, to to come up with to to beat
Robin Williams may recipes. And they used Will Smith as
a genie. That was fantastic, absolutely fantastic. And then I
forget who they used for Jafar. But but you know,
if you're so concerned about well, we.

Speaker 3 (29:56):
Gotta you know, you.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Like Helen m Helen Moren was I think cast as
gold in my Ear. Helen Moren is amazing. She could
do a fantastic Golden my Ear. But people got mad
because They're like, but you're not using somebody Jewish, you know,
you're not using somebody in French. You're not using some
somebody Latino in these movies. And so eventually Hollywood starts

(30:21):
to trip on themselves because they don't want to upset somebody.
And and if a villain is going to be looked
at as well, wait a second, this villain is representing,
you know, real life. Don't don't be representing you know.
You could have a villain that could look like you
could have a villain that's a woman. You could have

(30:42):
a villain that's a man. You could have a villain
that's white, black, You could have a villain. You can
do that successfully without insulting a race. Or you won't
insult somebody if you don't make it political, like The Boys.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
The Boys was a show I think on Apple.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Originally really good, really popular, and then they decided, well,
why don't we make the evil bad guy like Trump,
where we have American flags around him, and we start
to make and and and then they change it all
where now when you watch The Boys, it's supposed to
be an anti Trump show.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
Well, nobody wants to watch it.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
You had a really good villain. Did you really have
to politicize it? So I think you can do stories
with antagonist and protagonists. We've done it for years, and
I think you can do it being very sensitive to
and aware that you don't want to be, you know, propagating,

(31:46):
you know, stupid wrong stereotypes.

Speaker 8 (31:48):
You know.

Speaker 2 (31:48):
But but I don't know what Disney's gonna do, because
it looks like they're really kind of phasing out a
lot of their recipe.

Speaker 3 (31:56):
But I said, I.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Don't know if I was a big fan of that recipe.
To begin with one eighth seven seven dot dollar, they'll tell.

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Speaker 3 (34:19):
All right, we are back on the Doctor Delia Show.
Thank you all for tuning in. One eight seven seven
Doc Dolly one eight seven seven d O C D
A L I.

Speaker 2 (34:28):
So I guess a woman in London god fined one
hundred and fifty bucks for dumping her coffee out in
a street drain. Now, how many of you have had
a drink? You're walking around going you know what? I
need to throw this out, but I don't see a

(34:48):
garbage and I don't want the heavy weight, you know,
in the bag or whatever. So let me dump it
out in a drain and now I'll.

Speaker 3 (34:56):
Throw out the cup. I've done that before.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
I mean, I I don't want to just splash the
street or get it on somebody's car. Apparently it's because
in London they think that coffee can hurt the environment.
Burkeku Yes Celert from Coop West London or Q said
she got one hundred and fifty pounds fine because she

(35:20):
dumped her coffee in a public road gully. She was
fined under section thirty three of the Environmental Protection Act,
which prohibits disposing waste in a manner likely to pollute
water or land. Now we have found out that the
council did eventually cancel the fine. But scientists are saying, yeah,

(35:41):
you're really not supposed to be dumping your coffee down
the drain, really, so you gotta drink it all. I mean,
when you pee it out, it's gonna get into a drain.

Speaker 3 (35:55):
Well.

Speaker 2 (35:56):
It's surface water drains and not necessarily a scene in
your home. But apparently these surface water drains lead directly
to local rivers and streams without treatment. A single coffee
might not be much, but according to Daily Mail, it
can add up and depend on the type of coffee,
it could block drains and proof fatal for fish living

(36:22):
in the local waterways.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
The caffeine is a toxin, they say.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Black coffee itself by not contay the pllutants, but if
you have all sorts of sugar and caramel and milk
and other stuff, they say caffeine could be toxic. To
aquatic ecosystems and concentrations of around one point two micrograms
per liter.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
Now that is kind of a lot for one coffee.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
But your cappuccino or pumpkin spice latte can have more impact.
Milk and sugar in the waterways allow bacteria to feed
on these natural products, and then that could cause the
fish to get diabetes or other things.

Speaker 3 (37:05):
So, you know, whenever you go out of the country.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
Just kind of be aware that there's different laws, that
there's just different you know that, just like tweeting. I mean,
if you're taking a trip, Yeah, you're going across the border,
you're going across the pond. I mean they find you.
They have different rules, different laws, they say. Also, some

(37:32):
of milk can compete with oxygen in the water, causing.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
Fish to suffocate.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
I did not realize we were killing fish by dumping
our coffee in a dram Apparently the Scottish Water Company
told households to stop dumping milk down the drain because
environmental risks.

Speaker 3 (37:55):
So where do you put the milk? Well, you know,
we take things for granted.

Speaker 2 (38:04):
We don't realize that fats and milk can leave behind
a greasy film that coats the inside of pipes. This
can cause blockages. I mean, we throw stuff out all
the time.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
I but.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
I mean, I'm sure people's pee is pretty toxic. Remember
they were talking about fish were getting prozac. So many
people were on prozac that the fish weren't even responding
to threats because they were so chill, having consumed prozac
in microdose levels really one seven seven doctor one eight

(38:43):
seven to seven, d ocd Ali. I love history, and
this caught my eye. CNN wrote a piece on multiple
diseases may have devastated Napoleon's army Back in eighteen twelve,
French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte led an army of over half
a million men to invade Russia in eighteen twelve. Six
months later, the army was forced to retreat. Only tens

(39:06):
of thousands of soldiers made it back from the half
a million.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
So was it the battles Russians were tough to be
starvation typhoid? So researchers have now found.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
Evidence in the DNA remains of the soldiers Wow soldiers
from eighteen twelve French army, and they think there were
multiple diseases, including two previously undetected types of bacteria. The
study was published Friday in the journal Current Biology. They said,
previously we thought that there was just one infectious disease

(39:44):
that decimated the Napoleon army, Typhus.

Speaker 3 (39:47):
This is going to lead author Remi Barbieri.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
He works at the institute's Pasteu in Peri. He holds
a postdoctoral position at Estonius University of Tartu. But instead
they fail found other culprits Salmonella and Enterica Borollia recurren this,
this is a bacteria that causes parent typhoid fever or
relapsing fever. Well, no, Salmonella and Erica causes the parent

(40:14):
typhoid fever.

Speaker 3 (40:16):
Borella burrollia causes the relapsing fever. Now what did they do?

Speaker 1 (40:21):
Well?

Speaker 2 (40:21):
They analyzed teeth from the fallen soldiers who were found
in mass graves uncovered in two thousand and one in Vilnius, Lithuania.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
And these new findings.

Speaker 2 (40:29):
Not only give a clear picture of a significant historical event, but,
according to Ciannana, highlights how technology has advanced and allows
us to figure out what might have happened. Napoleon and
its troops reached Moscow, but they weren't met with Russian soldiers.
The city was abandoned, there were burnt crops, no supplies available,
so they couldn't eat.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
That's what I mean wartime. These are the tactics they
would do if we have.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
To retrieve, Well, we're gonna leave nothing for them so
they don't get stronger, so they'll just have to leave.
So then the harsh winter months approached and the French army,
without having any food, had to retreat. Rakeetsia prawa zeki
is a bacteria responsible for typhus, and it was detected
in the teeth of Napoleon soldiers during a two thousand

(41:15):
and six study, but the research was limited by the
technology at this time. So now they were able to
do high throughput sequencing and sequence millions of friends of
DNA at the time, and it allowed for highly degraded
DNA to be identified better because obviously these are like
over two hundred years old, so this is pretty damn cool.

(41:36):
They took thirteen samples from the bodies and found no
traces of Typhus, but that doesn't mean it discredits the findings. Yeah, again,
it was only thirteen samples, but they were able to
find other bacteria.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
So I love being able to try to go back
and figure out.

Speaker 2 (41:54):
What might have happened, because, as you know, history could
change and on a flip of the dime, but.

Speaker 3 (42:00):
You know, something like this, it's pretty fascinating to me.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
So what's also fascinating is how New Yorkers are looking
at the.

Speaker 3 (42:09):
Holes Aron Mondami.

Speaker 2 (42:13):
Potential takeover of the next election. In fact, we're being
told that twenty five percent of New Yorkers, according to
New York Post, are considering flee if Zoron Mondami wins.
And also interestingly, I think the New York Knicks got
mad at him, telling him to cease and desist because
I believe he was using a logo similar to theirs.

Speaker 3 (42:36):
The New York Knicks sent a seasoned desist letter they
do not endorse him.

Speaker 2 (42:42):
In a statement, the Knicks made it clear they do
not endorse mister Mamdani for mayor. They say the New
York Knicks have sent New York City mayorieal candidates Zaron
Mondami a seasoned desist letter for using the New York
Knicks a logo to promoter as candidacy. The NIXT want
to make it clear that we do not endorse mister
Mondani for mayor. We object to his use of our
copyrighted logo. We will pursue all legal remedies to enforce

(43:04):
our rights. What the hell is this guy think? I mean, really,
he posted the logo on Instagram with the caption this
is our year, this is our time, New York forever.
And and you know, I think he might have been
at a Knicks game. But no, I mean, he's not
representing you know how Most of New Yorkers feel good
for them for speaking out. One eight seven seven doct

(43:27):
dollar don't go away?

Speaker 7 (43:51):
Can you believe with all the recent violent protests, looting,
and destruction, some areas are considering either defunding or abolishing
the At a time when America's neighborhoods need the protection
of police the most, some elected officials would rather create
more chaos by playing politics. If you're sick of elected
officials caving in to demands of the radical left, you're

(44:14):
not alone. It's time we stand up and declare our
support for local police. The majority of police officers are
important partners in protecting our god given rights. If you
prefer freedom over chaos, then learn how you can help
protect the local police that serve your community. Call today
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